THE TOP 100 COMIC BOOK HEROES OF ALL TIME

Posted on December 5th, 2011 by ekko

IGN published a top 100 comic book heroes that made me crazy, both in its predictability (Hey! Superman and Bats are #s 1 and 2!), overinclusiveness (every single Robin except Damian Wayne (who is the most interesting one by far), as well as Superboy and Supergirl?  Really?) and its attempts to be esoteric without providing sufficient justification (Groo makes the list, but they don’t really say what makes him so essential; James Gordon makes the list, but Aunt May and Uncle Ben don’t–nor does Jarvis; and Nova makes the list, but nobody really gives a shit about Nova).  Maybe it was the list’s sketchy criteria for placement: “Picked by their cultural impact, character development, social relevance, general cool factor, and importance of storylines, these are the best of the best.

It made me so nuts, I made my own list.  Yes, there’s a lot of overlap.  But mine is better.  Because I said so.

Note: If you’re just looking for a list without supporting arguments, you can jump to the last page of this post.  But you can’t tell me I was wrong to put Thor at #33 unless you go and read why.  So, read every page and then tell me why I’m full of $#!+.

Enjoy!

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HULK SMASHES THE AVENGERS, AND OTHER COMIC BOOK NEWS…

Posted on October 23rd, 2011 by ekko

HULK SMASH AVENGERS.  Coming February 2012.  “Hulk Smash Avengers” will be a 5-issue weekly mini designed to shamelessly build up to the Avengers movie.  It will be “Hulk vs.” battles that take place from 1960 on—one for each decade–all with covers by the great Lee Weeks.  The talent roster for each of these self-contained issues is:

·         Hulk vs. the original Avengers (1960s) by Tom DeFalco, Ron Frenz, and the great Sal Buscema on inks–featuring Executioner and Enchantress.
·         Hulk vs. Iron Man, Wasp, Vision and Beast (1970s) by Jose Casey and Max Fiumara .
·         Hulk vs. Cap, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Wasp, She-Hulk, and Thor (1980s) by Roger Stern and Karl Moline, featuring the “smart Hulk” and the Captain Marvel who later led Nextwave.
·         Mr. Fixit Hulk vs. West Coast Avengers (1990s) by Jim McCann, which means we’ll see Mockingbird, Hawkeye, Wonder Man and Tigra, among others.
·         Rulk vs. Mighty Avengers (2000s) by Fred Van Lente and Michael Avon Oeming, which takes place after Banner was imprisoned for smashing Manhattan in World War Hulk.
I have to say, the only one I’m really interested in is #3, because I’m a big Roger Stern fan and want to see what he’s up to these days, but the 1960s one has potential.  They really could have skipped the 1990s.  Most of us who actually enjoy our comic books try to pretend it never happened anyway.  Frankly, they should just either do an animated version of World War Hulk or re-release that series and the tie-ins as a big package.  I was a huge WWH fan—great, big, brawling fun.
Lots of other news rolling out of NY Comic Con this month—too much for me to keep up on in a timely fashion.  So, you may already know much of this.  Or not.  Hit the break to find out….

COMIC BOOK NEWS! HOORAY!

Posted on August 31st, 2011 by ekko

Before discussing the latest Avengers info and the state of the mutants post-Schism, I thought I’d produce a list of the major category winners of the 2011 Harvey Awards, presented at this year’s Baltimore Comic-Con (which, by the way, was ridiculously crowded this year thanks to Stan Lee being the guest of honor).

Major winners:

 

  • Best syndicated strip or panel: Doonesbury, Garry Trudeau (Universal Press Syndicate)
  • Best inker: Mark Morales, Thor (Marvel)
  • Best new series: American Vampire, Scott Snyder, Stephen King and Rafael Albuquerque (Vertigo/DC Comics)
  • Most promising new talent: Chris Samnee, Thor: The Mighty Avenger (Marvel)
  • Best original graphic publication for younger readers: Tiny Titans, Art Baltazar and Franco Aureliani (DC Comics)
  • Best cover artist: Mike Mignola, Hellboy (Dark Horse)
  • Best continuing or limited series: Love And Rockets, Vol. 3, Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez (Fantagraphics)
  • Best writer: Roger Langridge, Thor: The Mighty Avenger (Marvel)
  • Best artist: Darwyn Cooke, Richard Stark’s Parker: The Outfit (IDW Publishing)
  • Best cartoonist: Darwyn Cooke, Richard Stark’s Parker: The Outfit (IDW Publishing)
  • Best single issue or story: Daytripper, Fabio Moon and Gabiel Ba (Vertigo/DC Comics)

Glad to see Marvel getting love here—but it’s a little odd that all the Marvel books are Thor-related…Anyway, hit the break for gossip, leaks, and good news…

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POST COMIC CON NEWS ORGY…Part 2!

Posted on July 28th, 2011 by ekko

Modok=One of the best Marvel characers to look at.

Ben Templesmith=Genius comicbook artist.

And please, go here and vote for your favorite comic book movie!

Now hit the break for more news about comics and the world of comics…But beware of lurking spoilers!

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YOUR WEEKLY SUPERNERD NEWS!

Posted on June 7th, 2010 by ekko

1.  THE WALKING DEAD. I’m leading with this story because (a) I love zombies; (b) I love comics; and (c) I’m starting to love AMC’s original productions.  Oh, and (d) because “The Mist” is one of the best horror films of the past 10 years.  And this story combines all of this, and more!  AMC released still shots of what the zombies will look like in their Frank (Shawshank Redemption and The Mist) Darabont helmed adaptation of Robert Kirkman’s brilliant, ongoing epic, The Walking Dead.  The bad news: Season one will be just 6 eps.  No release date yet, either.  The picture, above, does a very nice job at mirroring Adlard’s brilliant art from the comic.  If they can do an equal job at paralleling Kirkman’s scripts, we’re in business!

Go here to see all the pictures.

2. GREEN LANTERN’S BIG AND SMALL, AND OTHER D.C. MOVING PICTURE NEWS. Here a Hal, there a Hal, everywhere a Hal Hal! Not only were plot points about the movie recently leaked to the internet, but Cartoon Network has announced a cartoon coming in 2012.  The leaked details weren’t huge (or unexpected), but they confirm that the film will feature the entire Green Lantern Corps, the threat will be Parallax, and characters will include Sinestro, Abin Sur, and Amanda Waller.  DC is also saying that their next live-action flick will be Batman in 2012, and then The Flash after that, but Wonder Woman and Aquaman are also in development.  Vincent Chase is up for the lead in the latter film.  Seriously, though, my question is, is Justice League dead in the water?  I wonder whether the abysmal failure that will be called “Jonah Hex” will have any effect?  And another thing: Why does it take so damn long to release all this stuff?  At least DC isn’t making the 1-a-year mistake Marvel keeps making: Both Batman and Superman will come out in 2012, with Bats getting Independence Day and Supes taking Christmas.  Still, it seems nobody has learned from Peter Jackson that it is easier and more economical to film three movies at once and then stagger the post-production and release dates.

3.  SPEAKING OF GREEN . . . I was a big advocate of the Rulk series when it started: Big, muscular McGuiness artwork and Jeph Loeb at his Bruckheimer best, but the series floundered under its own weight.  It started taking itself too seriously, created a whole conspiracy thing, and stretched out the central question: Who is Red Hulk?  Turns out, it is General Thunderbolt Ross.  Which we all pretty much knew anyway.  This series had a promising, fun start but ended up being some of the worst work these two extremely talented individuals ever put out.  Sad.

4.  X-MEN FIRST CLASS. And speaking of movies, the “X-Men: First Class” movie appears to have begun casting, so it may actually be a “go.”  James McAvoy has signed on to be the young(er) Professor X.  They’ve also got a director (Matthew Vaughn) and a release date of June 2011.

5.  TEEN TITANS . . . Hasn’t been good since Geoff Johns left it several years ago.  In fact, it’s been awful.  To try to save this once venerated franchise, D.C. is bringing in JT Krul.  Krul wrote the Blackest Night Titans spin-off, which wasn’t horrible but was pretty much dispensable.  He says he’s going to try to make the team stable and relevant again.  That would be nice.  During both the Marv Wolfman and Johns runs, it was one of my favorite reads.

6.  THE RETURN OF THE LIZARD. If you don’t know that Amazing Spider-Man has been revamping and reintroducing Spider-Man’s rogues gallery, one crook at a time, then you haven’t been reading this blog enough.  Spidey’s enemies are by far the most engaging group of baddies in comic history.  Yeah, Batman has a bunch of foes, but they’re not nearly as distinctive as the ones created by Stan Lee so many years ago, which included a zoo crew (Lizard, Vulture, Rhino, Scorpion); hunters, thieves and killers (Kraven, Chameleon, Shocker, Mysterio); mob leaders (Hammerhead, Kingpin, Silvermane); forces of nature (Molten Man, Electro, Sandman, Hydro Man); and of course the evil geniuses (Green Goblin, Tinkerer, Doc Ock).  The latest three-issue arc featured The Lizard, reimagined now as a Jeckyl/Hyde type who can control little lizards like Aquaman speaks to fish.  The plot itself was fairly simple, and not nearly as interesting as the Rhino and Sandman arcs, but it was well-written.  For example, the internal dialogue is on a par with Daniel Way’s work on Deadpool.  The star here, though, is artist Chris Bachalo.  Amazing work on a title that is surprisingly solid and consistent considering it publishes thrice monthly.

7.  THE RETURN OF BRUCE WAYNE. Between this title and Batman and Robin, I’m actually turning into something I never thought I’d be: A fan of Grant Morrison.  His narratives are still a little too random and insidery for me, a casual Batman reader, but they’ve gotten much better than they used to be.  And the stories are constantly intriguing.  I know where this miniseries has to end, but I have no idea how it is going to get there.

8.  THE DEATH OF DRACULA/X-MEN #1. By now most of you probably know that Victor (Deadpool: Merc With A Mouth) Gischler and Paco (Deadpool) Medina has written the next big X-Event, “Curse of the Mutants,” which is about mutants and vampires.  Basically, Lord Drac dies and the rest of the bloodsuckers scramble for a new leader.  Wow!  That sounds . . . Stupid.  No, not stupid: Blatant and pathetic.  We know all the teens are digging Twilight, and True Blood is the only popular show left on HBO, but come one.  The one-off Claremont did, years ago, where Storm hooked up with Dracula in the Uncanny X-Men title was good.  But no more ever needed to be said on the topic.  I’d say I’ll keep an open mind, but that would be a lie.  I won’t.  X-Men books have been too convoluted, intermingled, intermixed and complicated for decades now, and just starting at an issue #1 simply is too little, too late.  How did Claremont’s brilliant vision get so off track?

9.  AVENGERS MOVIE. Last but not least, one of my favorite new actors, Jeremy Renner, may play Hawkeye in The Avengers.  Combine that with Joss Whedon in line as director and you’ve got The Best Superhero Movie Ever Made.

SUPERNEWS: MOVIES AND T.V. EDITION

Posted on May 31st, 2010 by ekko

I decided to bust out my weekly musings on superdoings into print and moving media this week, because there’s just so darn much I wanna talk about!

Please, give me comments if you like these features—I enjoy writing them, but I know that most of my regular readers come here for music . . .

1.  MORGAN SPURLOCK MOVIES. The top story this week has to be that one of the most brilliant documentarians of all time, Morgan Spurlock, is going to turn his lens on the San Diego Comic-Con.  Stan Lee, Joss Whedon and Harry Knowles will executive produce.  They’re also looking for folks to interview and put in the movie.  Here’s the details:

We are looking to cast original, eccentric, funny, touching, and mildly obsessive people that will capture the excitement, enthusiasm, joy, and passion of comic book, anime, sci-fi, and fantasy lovers everywhere.  If this Convention will be the highlight of your year and you have a story to share about your passion, let us know. Join the fellowship, take part in this epic documentary, and write us at ComicConDoc@gmail.com. Include your name, phone number, a picture, and tell us your story.

2.  MARVEL MOVIES. I guess the hype machines are going again.  Rumor has it now that the 2012 film will feature the Skrulls and a hypnotized Hulk.  True Merry Marvel Marchers know that Loki got Hulk to do nasty stuff way, way, WAY back in The Avengers #1, so we’re not totally rewriting history here.  Just mostly.  Rumor also has it that the film will be (ugh) in 3D.  Non-rumor has it that Dominic Cooper is confirmed to play Howard Stark (Tony’s poppa) in the Captain America movie.  I expect he’ll be designing the shield that made a cameo in Iron Man 2.

3.  D.C. MOVIES. Is anyone who saw the preview even close to being interested in seeing Jonah Hex when it comes out in a few weeks?  Looks terrible.  On the other hand, Green Lantern moviepeople are already talking sequel.  If the flick is good, I’ll consider forgiving them for stealing away our chances of getting a Deadpool movie any time soon.

4.  IRON MAN, COWBOYS & ALIENS, AND HOWARD STERN. On Sirius Radio’s “Geek Time” show, Iron Man 2 director Jon Favreau said that “Senator Stern” was named after Howard Stern, and offered the radio host a role in Cowboys & Aliens.  (Stern said he wasn’t interested.)  But of all the so-called superhero geeks associated with The Howard Stern Show and with Geek Time, had nobody heard of Roger Stern, the most important and influential Iron Man writer in history?  Seems to me Favreau was clearly kissing Howard’s behind.

5.  SMALLVILLE. Will be cancelled after next season.  It’s about time.  The show is getting old.  Very old.  And they’re still not saying whether he’ll put on the suit.  Or if Lex Luthor will return.  These are the two biggest faults with the series, so if these aren’t fixed, I doubt I’ll stick with it.  I fast-forward through almost every episode these days, anyway.

6.  METRIC—YES, THE BAND. And for my regular music readers, this last item: I’m not a fan of the Scott Pilgrim comic (it’s not bad, it’s just not my thing), but the movie looks great.  As does the soundtrack, which will feature Metric, among other bands.  Remember when Metric used to be one of the hugest things on the blogosphere, along with Rilo Kiley?

Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright (Bob Dylan) (acoustic)-Metric (direct link)

Such Great Heights (Postal Service cover)-Rilo Kiley (direct link)

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